The issues on these appeals from jury convictions of aggravated burglary are (1) whether there was reversible error in the instruction on the effect of the defendants’ flight, (2) whether the trial court erred in refusing a lesser included offense instruction on criminal trespass, and (3) whether the curative instruction erased the effect of an erroneous closing argument by the prosecutor. We affirm.
A witness saw the defendants enter the victim’s yard. One ascended her porch steps, and the other peered in a side window. A few minutes later, a police officer summoned by the witness saw the two men leave the front porch. When the officer identified himself and ordered the defendants to stop, they first hid and then fled. Both were apprehended, one almost immediately and the other within minutes. A firearm was found on the ground at each of two different locations where the defendants had stopped during flight. The pocket of one defendant contained jewelry missing from the bedroom of the victim’s house.
1. The court gave the following instruction on flight:
The flight or attempted flight of a person immediately after the commission of a crime or after he is accused of a crime that has been committed, is not sufficient in itself to establish his guilt, but is a fact which, if proven, may be considered by you in the light of all other proven facts in deciding the question of his guilt or innocence. The weight to which such circumstance is entitled is a matter for the jury to determine.
You are further instructed that flight affords a basis for an inference of consciousness of guilt and constitutes an implied admission.
Although our cases affirm the admissibility of evidence of flight,
State v. Marasco,
State courts differ widely in their attitudes toward flight instructions. For example, Iowa permits an instruction that flight is evidence of guilt under certain circumstances.
State v. Barr,
Iowa,
The opinions of the federal courts have provided the most extensive analysis. The United States Supreme Court has expressed reservations about evidence of flight: “We have consistently doubted the probative value in criminal trials of evidence that the accused fled the scene of an actual or supposed crime.”
Wong Sun v. United States,
Apart from their content, flight instructions have also been challenged for the nature and sufficiency of the evidence on which they have been based. Thus, the instruction in
Austin v. United States, supra,
was held inappropriate where the “flight” occurred one day after the crime, the evidence was in conflict on whether the defendant was aware that a police officer was following him, and the defendant did not run, but “walked away at a rapid pace.”
The 11th Circuit, less critical than the District of Columbia Circuit, has upheld a flight instruction similar to the first paragraph of the instruction in this ease.
United States v. Borders,
Similarly, a 10th Circuit decision requires that flight instructions be adequately supported by the evidence and approves a flight instruction which, though harmonious with the first paragraph of the instruction in this case, contains nothing comparable to the “implied admission” language in the second paragraph.
Bailey v. United States,
We are satisfied that there was ample evidence to justify an instruction on flight in this case. The evidence of flight was undisputed and consisted of the defendants’ running from the scene of the crime immediately after a police officer identified himself and ordered them to stop. This is not a case like
State v. Wrenn,
We are also persuaded that the first paragraph of the flight instruction given in this case was acceptable in view of the evidence. It should, however, have incorporated two further ideas. A flight instruction will not be completely free from criticism unless it advises the jury that there may be reasons for flight fully consistent with innocence and that even if consciousness of guilt is inferred from flight it does not necessarily reflect actual guilt of the crime charged.
In contrast, we can find no justification for the second paragraph of the flight *576 instruction given to the jury in this case. Indeed, the State does not even attempt to justify it. So far as we have been able to determine, the idea that flight constitutes an “implied admission” of guilt is not supported by any federal or state decision or by any of the analysis justifying flight instructions.
While the giving of the second paragraph of the instruction was error, in the circumstances of this case it was harmless error that did not affect the substantial rights of the defendants.
State v. Brafford,
2. Defendants also argue that the trial court erred in rejecting their proffered instruction on the lesser included offense of criminal trespass. Our definitive opinion in
State v. Baker,
Utah,
The evidence offered in this case did not provide a rational basis for both acquitting the defendants of aggravated burglary and convicting them of criminal trespass. The uncontradicted evidence shows that immediately after defendants were seen leaving the porch area of the victim’s home one defendant was carrying jewelry stolen from that home, and there was also evidence that both were carrying firearms. There was no evidence that defendants’ entry was with any intent other than to commit theft. Compare U.C.A., 1953, § 76-6-206 (criminal trespass). The court was not obligated to give the defendants’ instruction on the lesser offense in this circumstance.
3. Defendants’ final point is that the prosecutor committed prejudicial error in closing argument by commenting on the defendants’ failure to take the witness stand. As part of a series of “ask yourselves” questions, the prosecutor said: “[I]f the question is did they take guns into the house, ask them, or ask yourselves what did those persons who had the guns do with the guns while they were in the house.” Defendants objected out of the jury’s hearing, and the trial judge promptly instructed the jury that there had been a misstatement—that they were only to ask themselves the questions.
Defendants argue that the prosecutor’s comment was specifically designed to call the jury’s attention to the fact that the defendants had not testified. The State insists that the prosecutor corrected his slip of the tongue and that the trial judge’s curative instruction corrected any possible defect.
We have recently reviewed our law on these issues, noting that a prosecutor may refer to the absence of evidence for the defense, but that he commits constitutional error if his statement is intended or would be construed by a jury as a comment on the accused’s failure to testify.
State v. Hales,
Utah,
In this case, it is questionable whether the prosecutor’s rhetorical “ask them” formulation was intended as a comment on the failure to testify, and it is doubtful that the jury would have so construed it. Furthermore, the judge gave an appropriate curative instruction. While that instruction did not specifically mention the defendants’ right not to testify, defendants did not re *577 quest such an instruction. Measured against the standard of likelihood of a different result absent the error, the judge-cured prosecutorial misstatement does not constitute prejudicial error.
The convictions are affirmed.
